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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Bagot, R. v [2010] EWCA Crim 1983 (07 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2010/1983.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Crim 1983 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MRS JUSTICE SHARP DBE
MR JUSTICE HICKINBOTTOM
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R E G I N A | ||
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STEVEN COLIN TURNER BAGOT |
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Mr N Burn Appeared On Behalf Of The Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
"As far as the fingerprint he was is concerned, the fingerprint that was on the base of the pyramid amplifier was the defendant's right ring finger. That, you may have come to the conclusion, could not have possibly have been placed there in the course of the burglary because the two items were screwed together. The other print was the defendant's left palm print but was on top of the amplifier by the P of pyramid, and the left thumb impression was somewhere on the white plastic carrier bag from which was recovered the remote control and other small items taken in the burglary. As you know, members of the Jury, fingerprints cannot be dated."
So he invited them to exclude consideration of the print at the base of the amplifier on the basis that that print resulted from an innocent handling of the amplifier at some stage. It seems a little difficult to suppose that the jury could have been sure that the other print found on the same article was not innocent.
"The prosecution say that that is clear evidence of a propensity to enter a relative's house, to use inside knowledge to retrieve the keys and to take the motor vehicle."
For reasons into which it is not necessary to go the judge excluded the evidence of one of the three convictions sought to be relied on by the prosecution, but in his initial ruling he held that they should be entitled to adduce evidence of the other two previous convictions. He summarised his reasons as follows:
"It seems to me that there is, on the face of it, a very clear link in the modus operandi of entry in the sense that in all three cases the defendant was using knowledge that he had gleaned from friendships or family relationships to gain entry into the relevant addresses and to take motor cars from the driveway. It is on the face of it quite unusual to have a young man who preys on relatives and/or friends in this fashion, and it is quite a distinctive hallmark, and to do it on three separate occasions, as alleged here, certainly is capable of amounting to a very clear propensity to take such action."
It was left at that stage that more work had to be done to identify the facts of the previous offences. That exercise ran into difficulties in relation to one previous conviction and as a result the judge ruled that evidence of that conviction should not be admitted in order to avoid the trial becoming bogged down in what would be essentially a form of undesirable satellite litigation.
"So what the prosecution are saying is that these convictions that I have referred to, together with this witness statement, demonstrate that the defendant has a propensity to commit offences of this type; that is breaking into a relative's house, going for the car keys, which are in a private place, leaving the house and taking the car."
The reference to a witness statement was to a witness statement of the appellant's mother's former boyfriend, the truthfulness of which was accepted by the defence. The offences were committed when the appellant was aged 14. What happened in brief was this: he had been locked out of a house where he was living with his mother and her boyfriend. He broke into the house. After doing so, at some stage he took the keys to the boyfriend's car which he then drove carelessly. He was stopped and arrested by the police.
"There is no minimum number of events necessary to demonstrate such a propensity. The fewer the number of convictions the weaker is likely to be the evidence of propensity. A single previous conviction for an offence of the same description or category will often not show propensity but it may do so where, for example, it shows a tendency to unusual behaviour or where the circumstances demonstrate probative force in relation to the offence charged."
In this case the previous incident resulted in the appellant being convicted of aggravated vehicle taking, driving without a licence and driving uninsured.
"It is on the face of it quite unusual to have a young man who preys on relatives and/or friends in this fashion, and it is a quite distinctive hallmark to do it on three separate occasions, as is alleged here."
To describe the behaviour on the first occasion when he broke into the home where he was living and subsequently drove off in his mother's boyfriend's car as "preying on relatives" is not an ordinary way of describing his behaviour.